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The Rural Voice, 1992-06, Page 39pastures, fencing paddocks and building facilities for dairy cows. Much of the original breeding stock was imported from Ontario Holstein herds. Currently there are about 70,000 head, 30,000 milking. Five employees tend the individual herds. Milking herds of 120 head pasture on about 147 hectares. Production, I learned, averaged about 11 litres per day. Feed was coarse silage made from cane plus molasses and grass pasture. There apparently was no money to purchase concentrate feeds and supplements to properly balance rations. Pastures were fenced for rotational grazing. Dairy buildings were open -sided cement frame structures with tile roofs. Manure and feed were moved manually in the barns and by horses and ox -drawn carts to the fields. A mechanical milker was used. Some cross -breeding with Brahma is being tried. The Cubans lack funds to import more good breeding stock or semen. Cuban veterinarians are developing embryo transplant techniques. The dairy farms are located in the valleys of rolling hill country. There was adequate soil water, so pasture grazing proved successful. The dairy operations are all state owned. An experimental vegetable production farm, also state owned, included 19 farms on 540 hectares. A board of directors of seven, 28 technicians and 450 workers supplied vegetables from this collective farm to 130 families. It took 485 people to supply vegetables for 130 families - 3.7 workers per family. Crops grown included carrots, radishes, peppers, tapioca, yams, potatoes, tomatoes, cabbage and beets. This collective farm selected seed to be self- sufficient in their seed requirements. Oxen were the main source of farm power. A few horses were used. The flesh condition of the oxen was reasonable but the horses were in very poor flesh. We would say they were ready for the bone yard. There must be no animal rights group active in Cuba. Equipment is very old. Irrigation water is available and the reddish clay loam produced well. Old Russian Belarus tractors were used on the large sugar cane farms to plow and work the cane fields. We saw Blyth Festival _■■■_ June 12 to September 12, 1992 Reservations Call (519) 523-9300 Canadian Stories On Stage — a new Ted Johns comedy • Drama • Comedy • Spine tingling mystery All in Blyth This Summer Elliott Smith, Jerry Franken, Alan Williams in Barbershop Quartet (1991) 1 FETTES TOURS AND TRAVEL LTD. JOIN US FOR A SUMMER VACATION 3 DAY OTTAWA Departs July 21 $269.00 Boat Cruise, Museum of Civilization, Cit Tour, Parliament Buildings August 22 $499.00 Tour Bardstown, Outdoor theatre of the Stephen Foster Story, Dinner at Old Stable, Shakers Village, Kentuck River Cruise & Kentuck Horse Park July 27, Aug. 24, Oct. 17 $619.00 Dixie Stampede Dinner Theatre, Dollywood Park, Music Show, Touring Smok Mountains 14 DAY ATLANTIC PROVINCES July 13, August 16 $1,399.00 5 DAY KENTUCKY 6 DAY DOLLYWOOD & SMOKY MOUNTAINS Travelling through Halifax, Peggy's Cove, Charlottetown, Quebec City, Whale Watching, Travel the Cabot Trail 8 DAY TOURS Branson, Missouri Oct. 16 $899.00 Mississippi Cruise and John Deere Aug. 27 $839.00 MOUNT FOREST 184 Main St- S. 323-1545 1-800-265-2131 LISTOWEL 63 Main St W 291-4100 OWEN SOUND 1045 2nd Ave E 371-3281 MITCHELL 94 Ontario Fid 348-8492 MSS JUNE 1992 35